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In the bottom half of the dialog window, there's a drop-down menu where you can select a few relevant options: Open the PDF in preview, go to the print dialog and you'll find some (hopefully) helpful settings - I say hopefully as I've not done exactly what you're after.Ĭlick the little down arrow next to the printer name to expand the print dialog if its not already larger.
#Create booklet pdf free mac download#
The most obvious problem is the several GB download and installation of a LaTeX distribution if all you want is the pdfbook script. My complete script also creates a temporary file and opens the resulting PDF: TMPF=`mktemp -t bookletXXXX`
In Finder, select a PDF file, then in the menu go to Services/Create booklet. Enter a simple script running pdfbook, for instance pdfbook Save it as "Create booklet" (for instance).
Select to "Pass input" as "arguments" in the newly created window.
Search "Run Shell Script" from the bar on the top of the left frame and double-click it. On top of the right frame, for "Service receives selected" choose "PDF files". Create a new document and select "Service". Launch Automator (on Yosemite it's in Applications/Others). If you don't want to use the command line, you can create a service easily. As dirty work-around, you can run export PATH="$PATH:/Library/TeX/texbin:/usr/texbin" every time before you use pdfbook (including in the service below). The best course of action is to ensure PATH is correctly set (lots of command line programs will fail if the PATH variable isn't correct and pdfbook is one of them) this isn't trivial under OS X if you want a consistent behavior between applications launched from the dock and applications run from a terminal so you definitely should search a complete solution to this specific problem. If the above doesn't work, then /Library/TeX/texbin isn't in your PATH (or /usr/texbin for older versions of MacTeX). It's simple to use from the command line: pdfbook mypdf.pdf For a free and universal alternative you can use the pdfbook script, part of the pdfjam collection which is usually included in LaTeX distributions (notably MacTeX).